University Daily Kansan, November 5, 1981 Page 5 Business From page one kept his tests in the office, and nothing was reported stolen. Both incidents were reported to the KU police' he said. Although neither man regarded the break-ins as part of a campus-wide problem, Smith said that he thought whoever took the exam would try again. "Staeling an exam is like taking heroin," he said. "If you get by after stealing one exam, then you're going to have to steal another one, especially in a course like business." "I will guess that they will, in fact, try again." Regardless of the possibility of another break-in, the KU police said that it was not possible to increase security at Summerfield Hall. "You're talking about one building out of it. John Mullens, KU police captain, said Maj. John MULLENS SAID that about 80 percent of criminal reports taken by the department involved theft or burglary and that perhaps one-third of those involved the use of keys. The "tock" is been in that door for 20 years, "the dock" has had a key to it. How many departments have a tock? Mulens said that the department was doing all that was possible regarding the cases but that it was hampered in the investigation and the prosecution, the school because of the Buckley Amendment. The Buckley Amendment is a federal law designed to guarantee students' rights to privacy by restricting access to student files. Teachers do not have access to class rosters, either. He also said that he had not seen an increase in break-ins recently, but he added that the trend is continuing. REGARDLESS OF WHETHER the break-ins would continue, Smith said, just the knowledge of someone cheating in his class was a big problem. "I really haven't come to grips with it," he said. From page one all four floors of the east wing of Haworth Hall. The state regulations require that kindergarten and first grade students be on the same floor as an exit Inspection A special agreement between the University and the state fire marshal's office allowed children attending the child development laboratory to be on floors above ground level, lockers said. "The state fire marshal can exempt a building from the state codes if he does not believe it to be unsafe." Some of the recommendations would be almost impossible to comply with, Anderson said, such as a recommendation that there be two exits on every floor of Dyche Hall. Another impractical recommendation was that exits be placed in the rear of two annexes that lie between Summerfield and Haworth balls be said. PROBLEMS WEREN'T confined to the older buildings, however. Wescoe Hall was cited for debris in a transformer room and the report noted that one of the furnishings on floor material stored in the attic of Fraser Hall. "Overall, we found everything in pretty good shape." Markley said. "But that's not to say anyone." KU has made a lot of progress in recent years toward meeting the state standards, he said. Some of the buildings this year had only minor repairs or replacements for exit stalls or outdated fire extinguishers. Fewer residence halls violated the state fire codes than the scholarship halls. Five of the eight residence halls had no deficiencies, the report stated. The other balls need emergency lighting, exit signs, and doors or door frames made of material that meets state codes, Markley said. State-approved materials must be able to burn for at least an hour before a fire can burn through them. The biggest deficiency in the residence halls is that there are no book-up pipes for fireoses on them. SCHOLARSHIP HALLS do not have this problem because they have no more than four floors, he said, but those halls violated more codes than residence halls. Open stairwells are a problem in scholarship hall, Markley said. Three women's halls—Miller, Watkins and Sellards—have open doors to the tree, Sellards is the only hall with stairwell doors. "That should be corrected," Markley said. "The closed vertical stairwells contain the fire, and if you can contain the fire, it gives you more time to escape." Of fatalities in fires, 80 percent occur in residential structures, said Jim McSwain, Lawrence fire chief. In Lawrence there are more than 500 residential multi-family structures, including fraternities, sororites and apartment complexes. Because the fraternities and sororites are privately owned, they are inspected by the police. This year, only half of the fraternity and sorority houses will be inspected, McSwain said, because the former fire inspector changed jobs. The fire Department inspects Greek houses annually. "Greek houses for the most part have met the standards set by the state fire marshal and the government." Enter a Free Man Nov 5-7 & Nov 12-14 8:00 pm Written by Tom Stoppard The Baker University Theater Production. at the Darby-Hope Theater at Baker in Baldwin, Kansas Box Office No. 594-6451 extension 555 $1.00 students $3.00 adults INTERNATIONAL CAREER? A representative will be on the campus THURSDAY NOVEMBER 12, 1981 to discuss qualifications for advanced study at AARON HANAGI SCHOOL and job opportunity in the field of AARON HANAGI SCHOOL INTERNATIONAL MANAGEMENT Interviews may be scheduled at UNIVERSITY PLACEMENT CENTER AMERICAN GRADUATE SCHOOL OF INTERNATIONAL MANAGEMENT Thunderbird Campus Glendale, Arizona 85306 Thursday, Nov. 5 Celine and Julie Go Boating (1974) A mad, merry surrealist blend of fantasy and ... more fantasy. Celine and Julia van Riepel have escaped banks from Alice in Wonderland to Hoboken. Juliette Berto and Maxine Reid have involved in this enchanting, enthralling game of a film, which has already been filmed since Citizen Kane . . . (Jacques) Rivière is the work at day 198 (8 min) Color: T30. Friday, Nov. 6 Breaker Morant (1979) A brilliant new Australian film, during the Boer War, a group of soldiers kill a German priest; when the Germans threaten to use it as an excuse to enter the war, one of their soldiers for an act that may have been barbaric but was also military policy. Mining powerful courtroom scenes with Germans raises troubling questions brilliantly. With Edward Woodward as Harry "Breaker" Morant, and Jack Thompson, directed by Bruce Boreseal (The Getting Down) from 1972-76 (107.200 x 810), color, 3:40, 7:30, 8:30. Peeping Tom Condemned on its original release, Michael Powell's film about a payphone robbery at the moment of death is both about the movie viewer as voyeur, and of course a top-hat horror story. "A one-man chase through the perversely funny..." -Darwin Anselman. With Caroll Bell, Ann Massey, Moe Shore. A classic with 103 minutes. Color: 120 Midnight Unless otherwise noted, all films will be shown at Woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union. Midnight Movies are available at the SUA, Kansas Union, available at the SUA office, Kansas Union, 4th Level, Kansas Union, Information/matches allowed.